“It was hard because there wasn’t good anesthesia (and) they didn’t have the antibiotics that we have now,” Hagens said. “So there was a lot of danger in living in the time period.”

“It’s hard to imagine,” Moulton said. “It makes me wonder, a century ago, did the people who actually lived those lives, what kind of faith did they have in their doctor.”

About the exhibit

Someone suggested to Lois Hendrickson, curator of the Wangensteen Historical Library, the idea of creating an exhibit by combining medicine and Downton Abbey. Hendrickson and Hagens, both fans of the show, jumped at the opportunity.

“The vast majority of the materials in the exhibit does belong to Wangensteen,” Hendrickson said. “In addition to the books, the Wangensteen has a nice artifacts collection, which you see exhibited as well.”

To get started the two watched all of the shows again, trying to identify themes for the exhibit.

“We focused on the medical events that happened around World War I,” Hagens said. This included shell shock, amputations, civilian nursing, and development of civilian hospitals. “We’re really interested in showing the changing role of medicine during this time period,” Hendrickson added.

Why you should visit

Hendrickson and Hagens say the exhibit is popular with Downton Abbey fans and for non-fans who are simply interested in history and medicine.

“I think people who come see the exhibit, who love Downton, will come away with a new understanding of the show,” Hagens said.

Said Hendrickson: “People who are not fans of Downton Abbey can still enjoy the exhibit because it really lays out how medicine changed during this time period and how World War I, for example, influenced medicine.”